IDF International Dragonfly Fund - Report Journal of the International Dragonfly Fund 1- 36 Jens Kipping, Falk Petzold & César Ngoulou Dragonfly and Damselfly (Insects: Odonata) inventory of the Réserve Naturelle des Gorilles de Lésio-Louna (RNGLL) on the Batéké Plateau in the Republic of Congo Published: 26.12.2018 126 ISSN 1435-3393 The International Dragonfly Fund (IDF) is a scientific society founded in 1996 for the impro- vement of odonatological knowledge and the protection of species. Internet: http://www.dragonflyfund.org/ This series intends to publish studies promoted by IDF and to facilitate cost-efficient and ra- pid dissemination of odonatological data. Editorial Work: Rory A. Dow, Milen Marinov, Martin Schorr Layout: Martin Schorr IDF-home page: Holger Hunger Printing: Colour Connection GmbH, Frankfurt Impressum: Publisher: International Dragonfly Fund e.V., Schulstr. 7B, 54314 Zerf, Germany. E-mail: [email protected] Responsible editor: Martin Schorr Cover picture: Elattoneura odzalae Photographer: Jens Kipping Published 26.12.2018 Dragonfly and Damselfly (Insects: Odonata) inventory of the Réserve Naturelle des Gorilles de Lésio-Louna (RNGLL) on the Batéké Plateau in the Republic of Congo Jens Kipping1, Falk Petzold2 & César Ngoulou3 1independent researcher, BioCart Ökologische Gutachten, Albrecht-Dürer-Weg 8, D-04425 Taucha/Leipzig, Germany, Email: [email protected] 2independent researcher, Pappelallee 73, D-10437 Berlin, Germany, Email: [email protected] 3IRSEN, Brazzaville, Republic of Congo, Email: [email protected] Abstract We present records of 99 Odonata species from the Réserve Naturelle des Gorilles de Lésio-Louna (RNGLL) in the Republic of Congo (Congo-Brazzaville) collected during a short survey from 14 January to 01 February 2017. It is the first systematic Odonata inventory for the RNGLL and for the Congolese part of the species-rich Batéké Plateau. A short introduction is given about the existing knowledge of dragon- flies and damselflies from the country. Amongst the recorded species eight are new for the country list, raising it to at least 208 species. Some of the recorded species are endemic and characteristic for sandy streams and rivers of the Batéké Plateau. The potential diversity of the plateau in comparison to other regions of the country is discussed. Résumé Au cours d’une courte mission d’inventaire, réalisée du 14 janvier au 01 février 2017, dans la Réserve Naturelle des Gorilles de Lésio-Louna (RNGLL) (République du Congo) 99 espèces d’Odonates ont été récoltées. Il s’agit du premier inventaire systéma- tique des Odonates de la RNGLL et de la partie congolaise du plateau Batéké connu pour sa grande richesse spécifique. Une courte introduction est donnée sur les connaissances actuelles concernant les libellules et demoiselles du pays. Parmi les espèces récoltées lors de notre mission, huit sont nouvelles pour la faune de la R. du Congo qui atteint dès lors un total de 208 espèces. Quelques-unes des espèces récoltées sont endémiques et caractéristiques des cours d’eaux et rivières au lit de sable du plateau Batéké. La diversité spécifique potentielle du plateau est discuté pa rapport à d’autres régions du pays. Key words: Odonata, Lestes pinheyi Fraser, 1955, Lestes uncifer Karsch, 1899, Elattoneura odzalae (Aguesse, 1966), Pseudagrion aureolum Dijkstra, Mézière & Kipping, 2015, Phyllo- macromia contumax Selys, 1879, Aethiothemis mediofasciata Ris, 1931, Crocothemis IDF-Report 126 | 1 Kipping, Petzold & Ngoulou divisa Baumann, 1898, Porpax sentipes Dijkstra, 2006, Trithemis apicalis (Fraser, 1954), Trithetrum navasi (Lacroix, 1921), Urothemis venata Dijkstra, Mézière & Kipping, 2015. Introduction The Odonata fauna of Congo-Brazzaville is very little known but it is estimated to con- tain a minimum of about 260 species. Only few publications deal with Odonata from Figure 1: Map of Congo-Brazzaville (Republic of Congo) and adjacent countries. With available records in ODA (white dots) the location of RNGLL and place names men- tioned in the text. 2 | IDF-Report 126 Odonata of the Réserve Naturelle des Gorilles de Lésio-Louna (RNGLL) the country. Pinhey (1962) lists several selected records made by B.K. Watuliki in Ketta and Mambili Forests, Ouesso District, Etoumbi Forest, Makoua District and Mekoum and Sembé Forests in Souanké District. The material consists of 49 species and Pinhey described five new species out of it. Most collected material is held in the National Museum Bulawayo, Zimbabwe (NMBZ) and has been examined by K.-D.B. Dijkstra (Dijkstra 2007a, 2007b), but a few specimens were deposited in the National Museum of Kenya (NMK), Nairobi. Aguesse (1966) analysed the material of the scientific mission of A. Villiers and A. Descarpentries (1963-64) including 43 species and described two new species. This material was restudied after its return to the Museum National d'Histoire Naturelle (MNHN), Paris by Legrand & Lachaise (1980). Carletti (1997) pro- vided in her thesis an overview about the Odonata fauna of the country containing many records collected by G. Onore at various locations in the Pool and Plateaux Departments. The material of this collection is stored either at the Museo Civico di Storia di Milano (MBNM) or Museo Zoologico ‘La Specola’ Firenze (MSNM), Italy. Terzani & Marconi (2008) reported about a small inventory of the Réserve Naturelle de Tchim- pounga in the coastal region of the country. Several new species were described based on material from the Biosphere Reserve of Dimonika, Odzala-Kokoua National Park and around Brazzaville (Aguesse 1966, Legrand 1985, Legrand 1987, Carletti & Terzani 1997). Unpublished records after 2000 originate from very few places like a forest area north of Ouesso (sampled in September 2014 by G.J. Diedericks), the Conkouati-Douli National Park (sampled in February 2010 by P.H. Lambret) and Hinda area, Pointe Noire surrounding (sampled in April-June 2014 by L. Niemand & C. Ngoulou). The Odonata Database of Africa (ODA) (Kipping et al. 2009, Clausnitzer et al. 2012) cur- rently contains about 135,000 datasets from the whole African continent. Until 2016 only 1,752 records originate from Congo-Brazzaville and about 80% of these country records are older than 30 years. Hence huge parts of the country are completely unknown in terms of occurrence of Odonata species (see map in Figure 1). From re- cent and very intense research activities in Gabon by N. Mézière and colleagues from 2007 till 2015 it is known that especially the Batéké Plateau is home to many Odonata species, among them numerous endemics. The description of 60 new Odonata species from the African continent by Dijkstra et al. (2015) revealed the importance of that plateau and its surrounding rainforest as about one third of the new species derived from there. The sandy Batéké Plateau stretches from south- east Gabon deep into Congo-Brazzaville. Whereas the Gabonese part is relatively well surveyed only very few scattered Odonata records are known from the much larger part in the latter country. The Réserve Naturelle des Gorilles de Lésio-Louna (RNGLL) is a protected area co- vering about 1,730 km2. It is situated on the Batéké Plateau in Pool Department, 115 km NNE of Brazzaville west of the main road to Ouesso. The eastern border of the reserve runs parallel to this road, to the north the Lésio-Louna borders another protected area, the Lefini Reserve. The Lefini River forms the border between the two reserves, with the other main drainages of the Lésio-Louna Reserve are the Louna, Lésio and Loubilika Rivers. These three rivers flow northwards to the Lefini River that IDF-Report 126 | 3 Kipping, Petzold & Ngoulou is a tributary of the Congo River about 70 km to the east. The Louna River separates the reserve into a large Western and smaller Eastern sector. Lésio-Louna Reserve was established on 28 December 1993 through an agreement between The Aspinall Foundation (TAF) of the UK and the Ministère de l'Economie Forestière, du Développement Durable et de l'Environnement (MEFDDEE) of the govern- ment of Congo-Brazzaville, as a sanctuary for the reintroduction of Western Lowland Gorillas (Gorilla g. gorilla) orphaned by the illegal bush-meat trade (King 2008, King et al. 2012). Later in 1999 it was upgraded to a Natural Reserve by Presidential Decree and increased in size by another Decree in 2009. The landscape of Lésio-Louna is an extended wide valley, cutting into the surround- ing Batéké Plateau. The valley is characterized by gently rolling hills, covered by grassland and dense gallery forest along the many river and stream courses (Figure 2). To the east, the park boundary follows mainly the escarpment up to the plateau, forming an up to 400 m high steep escarpment, partly forested and with rocky cliffs and outcrops. The geological underground consists mainly of poor sandy soils, forming the northernmost extend of fossil Kalahari sand shifted northwards during the Pleisto- cene (Walters et al. 2006). The altitude ranges from about 700 m on the plateau to 300 m in the river valleys. Figure 2: Typical landscape of RNGLL south of Iboubikro Camp, Lésio River is meandering in the dense gallery forest at the valley floor, 31.i.2017. Photo by Hannes Krahnstöver. 4 | IDF-Report 126 Odonata of the Réserve Naturelle des Gorilles de Lésio-Louna (RNGLL) The major habitats of the reserve are open Loudetia grassland and lightly wooded Loudetia or Hyparrhenia grassland, with gallery and swamp forests along the various watercourses, plus some patches of dry forest on higher ground (King & Chamber- lain 2007). The savanna within and outside the reserve is burned regularly by the people living just outside it. Frequency and extent of fire are major drivers forming the present forest-savanna mosaic. The climate of the reserve is similar to elsewhere on the plateau, with a dry season from late May to September, the heaviest rains in October-November and March- April, with a drier period around January-February (King 2011).
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